The Latest on H1N1 Swine Flu

The finding suggests that the CDC's recommendation for people with flu-like illness to avoid others
until at least 24 hours after they are free of fever may not go far enough.

"Three days after your fever subsides, you're probably still contagious with
H1N1 [swine] flu," says Gaston De Serres, MD, PhD, a medical epidemiologist at
the National Institute of Public Health in Quebec.

De Serres tells WebMD that it's not yet known exactly when it is safe to go
back to school or work. "But a couple of days [after symptoms strike] is likely
to be insufficient. You're probably contagious for about a week."

New Studies on Swine Flu Spread

De Serres led one of two teams of researchers that separately reported this
week that as many as one in five patients continue shedding H1N1 virus eight
days after symptoms start.

Both studies were presented here at the annual Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

For the first study, De Serres and colleagues swabbed the noses and throats
of 43 patients with confirmed H1N1 flu as well as those of their sick family
members.

On the eighth day after symptoms struck, 8% to 19% were still shedding live
H1N1 virus.

The second study, led by David C. Lye, MD, and colleagues at Tan Tock Seng
Hospital in Singapore, involved 70 patients. It showed that 80% were still
shedding virus after five days of illness, 40% at seven days, and 10% at 10
days.

People who were treated with Tamiflu shed virus for an
average of three fewer days than those not given the anti-flu drug, "but still,
some were showing signs of viral shedding after a week," Lye tells WebMD.

Tamiflu or another anti-flu drug, Relenza, is recommended for anyone
hospitalized with flu-like symptoms or at high risk of complications. The drugs, which should optimally
be started within two days of symptom onset, shorten illness by about one
day.

CDC Perspective

More than 1 million Americans have been infected with the H1N1 virus and
nearly 600 people have died from the swine flu, according to the CDC.

The CDC guidelines state that people with flu-like symptoms should stay home
and not go back to school or work until at least 24 hours after they are free
of a fever of 100 degrees Fahrenheit or more, or signs of a fever, without
using fever-reducing medicines.

People are generally feverish for one to three days after becoming ill. And
"symptoms such as cough can last for two weeks or
more," De Serres says.

Daniel Jernigan, MD, deputy director of CDC's flu division, says, "Some
people will continue to shed live virus after their fever stops; we know that.
The policies are intended to decrease, but not completely eliminate,
infection."

"If we had a virus with a very high attack rate or death rate, we might have
a very different policy," he tells WebMD.

Frank Lowy, MD, an infectious disease expert at Columbia University College
of Physicians & Surgeons in New York, says that if confirmed, the new
findings may help to explain why the H1N1 pandemic has spread so quickly. Lowy
was not involved with the work.